HY Family Medicine

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HY Family Medicine

- Patient has pain in the shoulder when raising the arm to paint a fence; Dx? à subacromial bursitis

(caused by repetitive overhead motion)

- Patient has pain in the shoulder when raising the arm above the head; subacromial bursitis isn’t

listed; Dx? à answer = rotator cuff injury

- Patient has pain in the shoulder lying on his or her side in bed; Dx? à rotator cuff injury

- Positive Gerber lift-off test à subscapularis injury à place dorsum of hand against lower back so

palm faces posteriorly; examiner applies pressure into palm + asks patient to move hand à if pain,

subscapularis injury

- Positive “empty can” or “full can” test; Dx? à supraspinatus injury à shoulder is abducted to 90

degrees; then downward pressure is applied; elicits pain when patient attempts to resist

- Resistance to lateral rotation of shoulder elicits pain; Dx? à infraspinatus or teres minor injury

- “Pitcher injury”? à infraspinatus injury; but if a pitcher has positive full or empty can test, use your

head à still supraspinatus injury

- Patient has elbow pain after leaning on elbow for long periods; Dx? à olecranon bursitis

- Patient has pain in lateral forearm with extension of elbow against resistance; Dx + Tx? à answer =

lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow); Tx = forearm strap

- Patient has pain in medial forearm with flexion of elbow against resistance; Dx + Tx? à answer =

medial epicondylitis (golfer elbow); Tx = forearm strap

- Pain on lateral wrist in breastfeeding woman à deQuervain tenosynovitis à answer = immediate

steroid injection into the wrist. Dx with Finkelstein test (place thumb in palm of hand; then wrap four

digits over thumb; then ulnar deviate; pain at lateral wrist with ulnar deviation is + test)

- Lump on the dorsum of hand alongside a tendon; painless; slightly mobile; Dx? à ganglion cyst; Tx =

needle drainage

- Wrist fracture + posterior displacement of radius; Dx? à Colles fracture (“dinner fork deformity”)

- Wrist fracture + anterior displacement of radius; Dx? à Smith fracture

- Proximal ulnar fracture + anterior displacement of radial head; Dx? à Monteggia fracture

- Radial shaft fracture + displacement of distal radioulnar joint; Dx? à Galeazzi fracture

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- Fracture of forearm in child with “bending” of the bone? à greenstick fracture à bone is soft so part

of bone remains intact

- Fracture in child abuse à spiral fracture (from rotational force/twisting of limb); also posterior rib

fractures

- Patient has hip pain lying on his or her side in bed?; Dx? à trochanteric bursitis

- Patient has lateral hip pain when palpated, when abducting against resistance, or when standing on

that foot; Dx? à greater trochanteric syndrome (gluteus medius or minimus tendonopathy)

- Patient has “locking” or “catching” of the knee; Dx? à meniscal tear

- Patient has pain in the medial knee; Dx? à anserine bursitis

- Patient has pain in the lateral knee; Dx? à iliotibial band syndrome

- 44F + pain worse in knee when going down/up stairs or when sitting for long periods of time +

crepitus + BMI 39; Dx? à answer = patellofemoral syndrome (patellofemoral pain syndrome); next

best step in Mx = “strengthening exercises for quadriceps muscles” + RICE (rest, ice, compression,

elevation).

- 25F + pain in anterior knee on the inferior kneecap + plays basketball + pain initially worse while

playing but past few weeks hurts when done playing as well; Dx? à answer = patellar tendonitis

(Jumper’s knee); next best step in Mx = “strengthening exercises for quadriceps muscles” + RICE.

- 15M + 5’11” + plays soccer + knee pain; Dx? à Osgood-Schlatter à inflammation of patellar ligament

at the tibial tuberosity; occurs in fast-growing, active teenagers; USMLE wants “repeated avulsion

microfractures” as an answer

- Patient has knee pain after spending long periods of time on her knees painting; Dx? à prepatellar

bursitis

- 32M + pain in anterior knee + fever 100.5F + joint effusion not present; Dx? à septic bursitis

- Any patient with red, warm, tender knee; next best step in Mx + Dx? à joint aspiration

(arthrocentesis); septic arthritis till proven otherwise

- 6M + viral infection + now has hip pain +/- fever; Dx? à answer = toxic synovitis (aka transient

synovitis), not septic arthritis à inflammation of the synovial lining of hip joint; Tx is supportive.

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- 6M + suspected JRA + red, hot, painful knee à must do arthrocentesis to rule out septic arthritis. If

the vignette sounds like classic transient synovitis (affects hip, not knee), you do not need to do an

arthrocentesis.

- 5F + 2-day Hx of limp and left hip pain + a week ago had watery stools and a temp of 100F + pain with

weight-bearing and movement + no swelling or erythema; Tx? à answer = ibuprofen (toxic synovitis).

- Biggest risk factor for septic arthritis à abnormal joint architecture

- Pt groups most likely to get SA à prosthetic joints, RA/OA, recent intense exercise/joint trauma;

peds (JRA)

- Pt group most likely to get SA à those with prosthetic joints (can’t be more abnormal than fake joint)

- Pt with OA or RA has red, warm, tender knee à do arthrocentesis (septic arthritis)

- 17F had kickboxing tournament last weekend + knee is red, warm, tender à arthrocentesis (SA)

- Kid + recurrent knee redness, warmth, pain + fever à Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA; Still disease)

- Kid + recurrent joint pain +/- high ESR +/- rash à JRA

- Kid + recurrent joint pain + anemia à JRA (anemia of chronic disease)

- Kid with suspected JRA has sore knee à must do arthrocentesis to rule out septic arthritis

- Patient has “knock-knees” (i.e., knees touch); Dx? à genu valgum

- Child has bow legs; Dx? à genu varum à can be seen in rickets

- 9F + both legs bowed + parents noticed bowing since she started to walk + recently bowing worse in

right leg + x-ray while standing shows collapse of the medial aspect of the metaphysis of proximal

tibia + rest of vignette describes healthy, thriving patient; Dx? à answer = tibia vara (Blount disease);

wrong answer is rickets; should be noted that bowing is physiologic age < 2 years; tibia vara.

- Patient has lateral thigh pain; Dx? à meralgia paresthetica à due to lateral femoral cutaneous

nerve entrapment

- 18F + anorexia + runs long distances + has foot pain; Dx? à metatarsal stress fracture

- 25M + wakes up with heel pain + gradually improves throughout the morning; Dx? à plantar fasciitis

- 29M + pain in ball of the foot; Dx? à metatarsalgia à overuse injury / from jumping or sports

- 44F + frequently wears high-heel shoes + painful lump on the underside of her foot between her third

and fourth toes; Dx? à answer = Morton neuroma à benign growth of nerve tissue between the 2nd

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and 3rd, or 3rd and 4th, metatarsal heads; usually from chronic irritation from high-heel shoes; Mulder

sign is replication of Sx when the metatarsal heads are compressed together.

- 42M + diabetes + decreased range of motion of the shoulder in all directions; Dx? à adhesive

capsulitis, aka “frozen shoulder” à Tx = range-of-motion exercises / physiotherapy

- 4-month-old + “clicking/clunking” on physical exam à (+) Ortolani and Barlow maneuvers à primary

hip dysplasia (congenital hip dysplasia) à once these are positive, the next best step is ORTHO

REFERRAL if it is listed à referral always sounds wrong, but this is the correct answer if it’s listed; if

it’s not listed, do ultrasound if under 6 months, or x-ray if over 6 months. Tx is with abduction harness

(Pavlik harness; looks frog-leg-like)

- 5-8-year-old boy with painful limp; no other risk factors; x-ray shows contracted capital epiphysis; Dx?

à Legg-Calve-Perthes (idiopathic avascular necrosis); the word “contracted” wins over “capital

epiphysis” à this is a Q on one of the NBME forms where everyone selects slipped capital femoral

epiphysis (SCFE), but it’s Legg-Calve-Perthes; Tx = hip replacement

- 5-8-year-old boy with painful limp + sickle cell disease; Dx? à avascular necrosis (but not Legg-Calve-

Perthes, because LCP is idiopathic)

- 5-8-year-old boy + painful limp + x-ray is negative + bone scan confirms diagnosis; answer? à USMLE

wants you to know that x-ray can be negative initially in avascular necrosis, but bone scan or MRI can

also pick it up

- 11-13-year-old overweight boy with a painful limp; Dx? à SCFE; Tx = surgical pinning

- Tissue mass in palm of hand + bent fingers; Dx? à Dupuytren contracture à seen in alcoholism,

diabetes, Norwegian descent, and epilepsy. Tx is surgical

- 2-year-old boy running + playing with 8-year-old sister + they were holding hands and he fell + now he

holds arm pronated by his side; Dx? à nursemaid’s elbow à radial head subluxation

- Tx for nursemaid’s elbow à hyperpronation OR gentle supination (both are correct answers; only one

will be listed)

- Kid falls on outstretched arm + pain over anatomical snuffbox; Dx? à scaphoid fracture

- Kid falls on outstretched arm + pain over anatomical snuffbox; next best step in Mx? à x-ray

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- Kid falls on outstretched arm + pain over anatomical snuffbox + x-ray is negative; next best step in

Mx? à thumb-spica cast à x-ray is often negative in scaphoid fracture; must cast to prevent

scaphoid avascular necrosis à re-x-ray in 2-3 weeks

- When is figure-of-8-strap the answer? à clavicular fracture

- What part of the clavicle gets fractured easiest? à middle-third

- First Tx for carpal tunnel syndrome in patient who can’t stop offending activity (e.g., office worker) à

wrist splint first; then triamcinolone (steroid) injection into the carpal tunnel; do not select anything

surgical as it’s always wrong on the USMLE; NSAIDs are a wrong answer and not proven to help

- 32F + paresthesias in thenar region of hand +/- hand weakness + sensation intact over dorsum of

hand; next best step in Dx? à NBME answer = “Electrophysiological testing”; call it weird, but it’s

what they want. Examination findings such as Tinel sign, Phalen maneuver, Flick test are insufficient

for diagnosis.

- Tx for cubital tunnel syndrome à elbow splint

- What is cubital tunnel syndrome à ulnar nerve entrapment at elbow à presents similarly to carpal

tunnel syndrome but just in an ulnar distribution and involves the forearm.

- What is Guyon canal syndrome à ulnar nerve entrapment at the wrist à hook of hamate fracture or

chronic handle bar impaction in avid cyclists

- Vegan + they ask for nutrient deficiency + B12 is not listed; what’s the answer? à FM shelf wants

calcium as the answer (normally get from dairy + fish); B9 (folate) is wrong because we get that from

dark green leafy vegetables

- 82F + tea and toast diet for past 6 months; MCV is elevated; is the nutrient deficiency B9 or B12? à

FM shelf answer = B9 (folate) deficiency à stores deplete within six months à “tea and toast” used

to be classic for vitamin C deficiency, but the shelf uses this colloquialism for folate deficiency. If

scurvy is the answer, they will say the patient “appears ill” and has bleeding from gums or around hair

follicles (perifollicular hemorrhages)

- 16M + painful testes + fever + positive cremasteric reflex; Dx? à answer = epididymitis

- Most common organism causing epididymitis? à Chlamydia in sexually active younger males; E. coli

in elderly males. This is also the same for prostatitis. If the vignette tells you no organisms grow on

culture, choose Chlamydia

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- 16M + acutely painful testes + negative cremasteric reflex; Dx? à answer = testicular torsion; do

Doppler ultrasound followed by surgical detorsion

- 6M + painful testis + superior pole shows blue/black discoloration + bowel sounds are decreased +

abdomen is rigid; Dx? à answer = strangulated hernia, not testicular torsion à answer = “operative

management”

- 6M + painful testis + superior pole shows blue dot + cremasteric reflex is intact; Dx? à answer =

torsion of appendix testis à this is on the new peds form but is fair game for FM à torsion of

appendix testis is different from testicular torsion; the latter presents with negative cremasteric

reflex; but torsion of appendix testis causes “blue dot sign”

- 8-month-old boy + unilateral testicular enlargement + light shone to it causes transillumination;

answer = “persistent processus vaginalis” (hydrocele)

- Tx for hydrocele? à observe until the age of one as most spontaneously resolve; this is almost always

the answer; after the age of one, surgical management can be considered

- 3M + hard nodule on testis; Dx? à yolk sac tumor (endodermal sinus tumor) à serum AFP may be

elevated

- 3M + hard nodule on testis + serum AFP + beta-hCG are elevated; Dx? à answer = mixed germ cell

tumor (embryonal cancer), not yolk sac tumor (yolk sac tumor is only high AFP; in mixed germ cell,

beta-hCG is also elevated)

- 22M + heaviness and/or bogginess of testes; Dx? à varicocele à one FM shelf Q literally says “bag of

worms” (normally this is so buzzy that we’d say this wouldn’t show up on an actual form, but it does,

so it must be mentioned here) à Dx with Doppler ultrasound à elective surgical intervention may be

performed to reduce risk of sub-fertility due to increased testicular temperature

- 8-month-old boy has undescended testis; Tx? à answer = observation until at least the age of 1; do

not do orchiopexy before age 1 for USMLE purposes.

- Tx for scabies? à answer = topical permethrin

- Tx for pediculosis (lice)? à answer = topical permethrin

- Tx for acne:

o Topical retinoids first (i.e., topical tretinoin; NOT oral isotretinoin); cause photosensitivity

(rash); also used for photoaging; mechanism is decreasing sebum production; topical

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tretinoin (not oral isotretinoin) is not a teratogen and does not have any effect on pregnancy

or male sperm

o Benzoyl peroxide used second; often coadministered with topic retinoids; mechanism is the

killing of bacteria

o Topical clindamycin

o Oral tetracycline; causes photosensitivity (blistering)

o Oral isotretinoin; must do beta-hCG in women; recommend barrier contraception even if on

OCP; can cause elevations in LFTs; can cause dyslipidemia; main complaint is dry skin +

peeling; takes several weeks to really start working but ultra-effective according to most

patients; can be commenced earlier in patients with severe nodulocystic acne; works by

diffusely shutting of sebum production

- 22F + pain radiating down one arm; Dx? à answer = cervical disc herniation.

- 68M + pain in the neck + MRI shows degenerative changes; Dx? à cervical spondylosis.

- 58F + long-standing Hx of RA + bilateral paresthesias in the upper limbs; Dx? à atlantoaxial

subluxation secondary to RA à answer = cervical spine MRI.

- When to give a statin on the USMLE? à Guidelines from 2019 ACC/AHA:

o Anyone age 20-39 with an LDL > 190 mg/dL

o Anyone age 40-75 with an LDL > 70 mg/dL

o Age >75 à assessment of risk status + clinician-patient discussion are recommended before

commencing or discontinuing a statin

o Diabetics <40 if LDL > 100 mg/dL; hypertension, smoking Hx, CKD, albuminuria, FHx of CVD

in first degree relative (sibling or parent), HDL <40 mg/dL.

o Anyone age <19 with familial hypercholesterolemia

o Balance of risk factors contributes to an ASCVD risk score that determines intensity of statin

administered to the patient (not assessed on USMLE); what the USMLE cares about is you

knowing whether or not to give a statin period.

- First drug to start in T2DM à metformin

- Side-effect of metformin à lactic acidosis

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- 40F + T2DM + on glyburide + HbA1c = 9.6%; what do we do? à answer = switch to metformin (beta-

islet cells are burned out if sulfonylurea isn’t working).

- 40F + T2DM + on glyburide + metformin + HbA1c = 9.6^; what do we do? à answer = switch to

intermediate-acting insulin (needs insulin if oral hypoglycemics aren’t working).

- 40F + T2DM + on glyburide + HbA1c 5.9% + BP 138/82 + creatinine of 1.0; what do we do? à answer

= start ACEi (e.g., enalapril) à start an ACEi if BP > 130/80 (either #) or evidence of protein in the

urine.

- 40F + T2DM + on glyburide + HbA1c 6.7% + LDL is 112 mg/dL; what do we do? à answer = commence

statin to bring LDL under 70 mg/dL (old guidelines said <100).

- How to Dx TB?

o PPD skin test is performed first diagnostically. If history of BCG vaccine, do interferon-gamma

release assay (IGRA) instead. Do not do IGRA in addition to PPD.

o If PPD is negative, repeat after one week. If negative again, no further studies indicated.

Repeats performed within 1 week may cause a false (+) secondary to a "booster reaction."

o If IGRA is negative, no further studies indicated.

o If PPD or IGRA is positive, do CXR. Do not repeat positive PPD tests.

o If CXR is negative, treat for latent TB / give TB prophylaxis. On the USMLE, "treatment for

latent TB" and "administer TB prophylaxis" mean the same thing.

o If CXR is positive, treat for active TB.

- How to manage a positive PPD test?

o Measure induration only. Erythema does not count.

- 5+ mm

o Recent contact with people with active TB

o HIV + status

o Organ transplant recipients

o Chronic prednisone use (>15mg/day for >1 month); anti-TNF-α agent use

o Findings consistent with TB on CXR

- 10+ mm

o Immigrant status (Western countries not included)

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o IV drug users

o Healthcare workers; prison workers; homeless shelter personnel

o TB laboratory personnel

o Children under 4 years of age

- 15+ mm

o Everyone

- How to Tx latent TB?

o 9 months INH + pyridoxine (vitamin B6) - The USMLE Steps 1 and 2CK assess this as the

answer.

o 4 months rifampin

o 3 months INH + rifapentine + pyridoxine

o Vitamin B6 must be given with INH to prevent vitamin B6 deficiency.

- Tx of active TB

o Rifampin, INH, pyrazinamide, ethambutol (RIPE) for 2 months, followed by RI alone for 4

more months (6 months total)

o And of course add pyridoxine (annoying that it sounds similar to pyrazinamide)

- Travel + self-limiting watery or brown/green diarrhea à Traveler diarrhea = ETEC HL or HS toxin

- Bloody diarrhea + poultry consumption à Campylobacter jejuni or Salmonella spp.

- Abx (clindamycin, beta-lactam, cephalosporin) + diarrhea à C. difficile

- Dx of C. diff à stool AB toxin test, not stool culture

- Fever of 104 + abdo distension in C diff à toxic megacolon à laparotomy

- Tx of C. diff à vancomycin, not metronidazole (updated guidelines as of Feb 2018)

- Bloody diarrhea + travel à Entamoeba histolytica

- Tx of E. histolytica à metronidazole + iodoquinol; can give paromomycin

- Close quarters or military barracks or cruise ship + watery diarrhea à Norwalk virus

- Child <5 years + watery diarrhea à rotavirus

- Few organisms causing bloody diarrhea à Shigella

- Bloody diarrhea + appendicitis-like pain (pseudoappendicitis) in a child à Yersinia enterocolitica

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- Bloody diarrhea + reactive arthritis in an adult à Y. enterocolitica, Campylobacter, Shigella,

Salmonella

- Diarrhea + Guillain-Barre syndrome à Campylobacter

- GBSyndrome CSF? à albuminocytologic dissociation (high protein + normal cells)

- GBSyndrome Dx? à electromyography + nerve conduction studies (on NBME)

- Cardiac ischemia + need to evaluate à ECG stress test first-line

- Cardiac ischemia + abnormal baseline ECG (e.g., BBB) à Echo stress test (need normal ECG to do ECG

stress test)

- Cardiac ischemia + patient can’t exercise à dobutamine + ECG/echo

- ECG shows diffuse ST-segment elevations à pericarditis

- Pericarditis Tx à NSAID, or steroid, or colchicine

- Central chest pain worse when supine; better when leaning forward à pericarditis

- Lateral chest pain after viral infection + increased CK à pleurodynia (intercostal muscle spasm)

- ST-segment depressions in the anterior ECG leads à posterior MI

- Electrical alternans on ECG à pericardial tamponade / pericardial effusion

- Pulsus paradoxus (drop in systolic BP >10 mm with inspiration) à cardiac tamponade or severe

asthma

- Beck triad à hypotension + muffled heart sounds + JVD à pericardial tamponade

- Tx of tamponade à pericardiocentesis or pericardial window

- Tamponade à do echo before pericardiocentesis if both listed (even though sounds wrong, on 2CK

NBME)

- Community-acquired pneumonia (CPP) + bilateral CXR infiltrates à Mycoplasma

- CPP + lobar pattern (right-lower lobe consolidation + dullness to percussion) à Strep pneumo

- CPP + lobar pattern, but they say “interstitial” in the vignette description à Mycoplasma, not S.

pneumo

- Empiric Tx for CPP à azithromycin

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- Tx for CPP is pt on Abx past three months à fluoroquinolone over azithro

- Pneumonia in CF patient <10 years à S. aureus exceeds Pseudomonas

- Pneumonia in CF patient >10 years à Pseudomonas exceeds S. aureus.

- Pneumonia after influenza infection à USMLE wants S. aureus

- Pneumonia + rabbits à F. tularensis

- Pneumonia + cattle à Coxiella (Q fever)

- Pneumonia + birds à Chlamydia psittaci

- Tx for aspirin toxicity à bicarb (increased excretion through urinary alkalinization)

- Tx for diabetic neuropathic pain? à answer = TCA (i.e., amitriptyline). Second-line is gabapentin

- Tx for herpetic / post-herpetic neuralgia (i.e., from shingles)? à gabapentin

- 82M diabetic + neuropathic pain + already taking carbamazepine + gabapentin to no avail; next best

step? à switch the meds to nortriptyline (a TCA) à student then asks, “Wait, I thought you said TCAs

are first-line. Why does this Q have the guy on those two meds then?” à two points: 1) we don’t like

giving TCAs to elderly because of their anticholinergic and anti-alpha-1 side-effects, so this vignette

happen to try other agents first, but if you’re asked first-line, always choose TCA; and 2) if we do give

a TCA to an elderly patient, we choose nortriptyline because it carries fewer adverse effects.

- How to differentiate cluster headache from trigeminal neuralgia? à cluster will be a male 20s-40s

with 11/10 lancinating pain behind the eye waking him up at night (he may pace around the room

until it goes away); details such as lacrimation and rhinorrhea are too easy and will likely not show up

on the shelf. In contrast, trigeminal neuralgia will be 11/10 lancinating pain behind the eye (or along

the cheek / jaw if V2 or V3 branches affected; it’s when V1 is affected that this diagnoses are more

readily confused) à TN is brought on by a minor stimulus such as brushing one’s hair or teeth, or a

gust of wind.

- Tx and prophylaxis for cluster headache? à Tx = 100% oxygen; prophylaxis = verapamil.

- Tx and prophylaxis for trigeminal neuralgia? à Tx = goes away on its own because it lasts only

seconds; prophylaxis = carbamazepine.

- Tx and prophylaxis for migraine? à Tx = NSAID, followed by triptan (triptans are NOT prophylaxis;

they are for abortive therapy only after NSAIDs); prophylaxis = propranolol.

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- 32M + diffuse headache relieved by acetaminophen + sleep; Dx? à answer = tension-type headache;

Tx = rest + taper caffeine (if taking it).

- Other HY uses for propranolol?

o Migraine prophylaxis (FM form gives patient with HTN + migraine; answer = propranolol)

o Akathisia (with antipsychotic use)

o Thyroid storm (decreases peripheral conversion of T4 to T3)

o Essential tremor (bilateral resting tremor in young adult; autosomal dominant; patient will

self-medicate with EtOH, which decreases tremor).

o Hypertension + idiopathic tremor (i.e., tremor need not be essential if patient has HTN à

answer on FM form is “beta-adrenergic blockade” for the HTN Tx).

o Esophageal varices prophylaxis (patients at risk of bleeds)

o Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (increases preload à decreases murmur)

o Social phobia

- Important point about Graves? à proptosis/exophthalmos + pretibial myxedema are specific; in

other words, there are numerous causes of hyperthyroidism (e.g., toxic multinodular goiter, toxic

adenoma, etc.), but only Graves will cause the eye findings

- Tx for ophthalmopathy in Graves à steroids

- Why do the eye findings occur in Graves? à glycosaminoglycan deposition in/around extra-ocular

muscles

- High BP + fever + increased CK à thyroid storm (Tx with PTU + propranolol)

- What is the role of potassium iodide (KI) in hyperthyroid Tx? à shuts off gland production (Wolff-

Chaikoff effect) à answer in person exposed to nuclear fallout or radioiodine vapors in laboratory

- Hashimoto parameters à high TSH, low T3, low T4, decreased iodine uptake

- Mechanism for Hashimoto à antibodies against thyroperoxidase + thyroglobulin; anti-microsomal

- Histo of Hashimoto à lymphocytic infiltrate (easy to remember bc the non-eponymous name for

Hashimoto is chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis)

- Tx for Hashimoto = levothyroxine (synthetic T4)

- 50M + low mood + BMI 26 à Hashimoto

- Proximal muscle weakness in Hashimoto + increased serum CK à hypothyroid myopathy

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- 45M + decreased ability to get up from chair unassisted + HR of 60 à Hashimoto

- 45M + high cholesterol + high hepatic AST + HR of 55 à Hashimoto (hypothyroidism can cause

bradycardia, high cholesterol, and high AST [the latter is weird, correct])

- Thyroid cancer in Hashimoto à thyroid lymphoma (autoimmune diseases à increased risk of

lymphoma)

- 22M + viral infection + very tender thyroid à subacute granulomatous thyroiditis (de Quervain)

- De Quervain parameters à triphasic à causes hyper-, then hypo-, then rebounds to euthyroid state

à most important point is that iodine uptake is DECREASED in de Quervain + drug-induced

thyroiditis, even if patient is in a hyper-phase.

- 22M + very tender thyroid + HR of 88 + tremulousness + heat intolerance à low TSH, high T3, high

T4, decreased iodine uptake (in contrast to Graves, which is painless and uptake is high)

- Tx for subacute thyroiditis à aspirin first, not steroids; steroids may be used later

- Drugs causing thyroiditis à lithium + amiodarone

- Surreptitious thyrotoxicosis àself- injection of thyroxine à low TSH, high T3, high T4, small thyroid

gland with decreased uptake

- Injection of triiodothyroinine (T3) à TSH will go down, T3 goes up (clearly), T4 does not go up

because T3 isn’t converted to T4; only T4 is converted to T3

- Injection of thyroxine à TSH will go down (negative feedback), T4 goes up (clearly), T3 goes up (due

to peripheral conversion), reverse T3 also goes up

- What is reverse T3? à an inactive form of T3; T4 is converted peripherally into T3 (active) and reverse

T3 (inactive)

- Anything else I need to know about reverse T3? à it’s increased in euthyroid sick syndrome à times

of stress/surgery/illness à cortisol increases à cortisol decreases conversion of T4 to active T3, so

more T4 is converted to reverse T3 à parameters in euthyroid sick syndrome: normal TSH, normal

T4, low T3, high reverse T3

- What is subclinical hypothyroidism à high TSH but normal T3 + T4 (don’t confuse with ESS)

- Subclinical hypothyroidism Tx à don’t treat unless TSH >10 (normal is 0.5-5), Hashimoto Abs are

present, or patient is pregnant à they ask this info on 2CK + Step 3

- Want to check thyroid function, what’s the first thing to order à TSH

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- Want to check thyroid function, what’s the first thing to order à free T4

- What is free T4 à most thyroid hormone is protein-bound and inactive; free T4 tells you definitively

whether the patient has thyroid derangement or not

- Pregnancy and thyroid à estrogen causes increased thyroid-binding globulin production by the liver

à mops of T4 à less free T4 à less negative feedback at hypothalamus + anterior pituitary à TSH

goes up transiently to compensate à more T4 made à free T4 rebounds to normal but now total T4

is high à parameters you need to know for pregnancy: normal TSH + high total T4 + normal free T4 +

normal free T3 + high thyroid-binding globulin

- Hyperthyroidism in pregnancy à LH, FSH, TSH, hCG all share same alpha-subunit; their beta-subunits

differ; some women have increases sensitivity of TSH receptor to alpha-subunit, so high hCG in early

pregnancy can stimulate thyroid gland and cause transient hyperthyroidism

- Hashimoto in pregnancy à increase pregnant woman’s dose of levothyroxine by 50%

- Graves in pregnancy à avoid methimazole in first trimester (teratogenic; causes aplasia cutis

congenita) à give PTU in first-trimester à in second + third trimesters, switch from PTU to

methimazole (methimazole no longer teratogenic later in pregnancy + PTU is heavily hepatotoxic)

- Pt being treated for Graves + mouth ulcers à agranulocytosis (neutropenia) caused by methimazole

or PTU.

- Young child with normal free T4 and low total T4 à thyroid-binding globulin deficiency (opposite of

pregnancy)

- Young child + large belly + large tongue + hypotonia à cretinism (congenital hypothyroidism)

- Most common cause of cretinism à iodine deficiency

- Most common cause of hyperthyroidism in elderly à toxic multinodular goiter

- Evaluation of thyroid cancer, first step? à palpation of thyroid gland (on FM 2CK form as answer)

- If thyroid nodule present, then check TSH; if TSH normal or high à answer = FNA, not USS; if TSH low,

do radioiodine uptake scan; thyroid cancer is cold, not hot, which is why no FNA with low TSH

- Tx for shingles (not the pain; the actual shingles)? à answer = oral acyclovir (one of the forms writes

“oral acyclovir” rather than oral valacyclovir, but both are fine) à however if patient is on

chemotherapy / is immunocompromised, give IV acyclovir

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- Patient older than 50 + temporal headache + high ESR; Dx + Tx? à temporal arteritis à give

immediate IV methylprednisolone (steroids) then do biopsy temporal artery (never biopsy first)

- Patient with temporal arteritis + jaw pain; why the jaw pain? à can cause temporomandibular joint

claudication

- Patient with temporal arteritis has muscle pain; Dx? à polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR)

- Tx of PMR? à oral steroids

- How to differentiate PMR from polymyositis? à both can have high ESR; PMR tends to have “muscle

pain + stiffness” with preserved muscle strength; polymyositis will present with proximal muscle

weakness +/- pain and stiffness (the idea is: PMR more likely to have pain + stiffness, but NO muscle

weakness; polymyositis less likely to have pain + stiffness, but WILL have proximal muscle weakness)

- Difference between polymyositis and dermatomyositis? à dermatomyositis has heliotrope rash

(around the eyes; don’t confuse with malar rash) +/- shawl rash +/- Gottron papules (violaceous

papules on the knuckles) +/- mechanics’ hands (rough/scaly palms)

- Dx of polymyositis/dermatomyositis? à anti-Jo1 and anti-Mi2 first; if positive, do confirmatory

muscle biopsy

- Mechanism of hyponatremia in heart failure? à answer = “baroreceptor-mediated ADH release” à

heart doesn’t pump as well à decreased systolic impulse à stretch of carotid sinus baroreceptors à

increased ADH release. This is the same autoregulation mechanism that will cause decreased

parasympathetic activity via vagus nerve.

- Nocturnal enuresis; when is it pathologic? à after age 5

- 6M + nocturnal enuresis; next best step? USMLE / NBME / shelf wants the following order:

o Behavioral answer first; e.g., spend more time with child; decrease overt stressors as much

as possible

o If the above not an answer, do star chart (positive reinforcement therapy; i.e., don’t wet the

bed and get a star; get 5 stars for extra dessert; 100 and we go to Disneyland)

o If star chart not listed or already attempted, next answer is enuresis alarm

o Medications like imipramine and desmopressin are always wrong; water deprivation after

5pm is also always wrong.

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o Students mess these Qs up because they’ll see enuresis alarm as correct on one form, but on

a different form it’s star chart, so know the above order

- 72M + intermittent claudication + absent distal pulses + Hx of coronary artery bypass grafting + high

BP that’s been gradually increasing past two years; Dx? à renal artery stenosis

- 32F + high BP + high aldosterone/renin à fibromuscular dysplasia (tunica media proliferation in renal

arteries) à this is not renal artery stenosis à if you say “renal artery stenosis,” that means

atherosclerosis

- Increased creatinine following medication administered to someone with renal artery stenosis; what

was the drug? à ACEi or ARB

- Tx for RAS + FMD à initially medical therapy with cautious use of ACEi or ARB; definitive is renal

angioplasty + stenting; FMD is not curable

- How to differentiate viral from bacterial upper respiratory tract infection (URTI)? à CENTOR criteria

o If 0 or 1 point, the URTI is unlikely to be bacterial (i.e., it’s likely to be viral). If 2-4 points,

chance is much greater that URTI is bacterial.

o 1) Absence of cough (i.e., no cough = 1 point; if patient has cough = 0 points).

o 2) Fever.

o 3) Tonsillar exudates.

o 4) Lymphadenopathy (cervical, submandibular, etc.).

- There is a version of the criteria that includes age, but on the USMLE it can cause you to get questions

wrong. So just use the simplified above four points.

o If 0-1 point, answer = “supportive care”; or “no treatment necessary”; or “warm saline

gargle” (same as supportive care)

o If 2-4 points, next best step = “rapid Strep test.” If rapid Strep test is negative, answer =

throat culture, NOT sputum culture

o While waiting on the throat culture results, we send the patient home with amoxicillin or

penicillin for presumptive Strep pharyngitis

o If child is, e.g., 12 years old, and develops a rash with the beta-lactam, answer = beta-lactam

allergy

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o If the vignette is of a 16-17 year-old who has been going on dates recently (there will be no

confusion; the USMLE will make it clear), the answer = EBV mononucleosis; therefore do a

heterophile antibody test (Monospot test)

o EBV is the odd virus out that usually presents with all four (+) CENTOR criteria

o This is why it’s frequently misdiagnosed as Strep pharyngitis. It is HY to know that beta-

lactams given to patients with EBV may cause rash via a hypersensitivity response to the Abx

in the setting of antibody production to the virus. EBV, in a patient who does not receive

Abx, can cause a mild maculopapular rash. But the rash with beta-lactam + EBV causes a

more intense pruritic response generally 7-10 days following Abx administration on the

extensor surfaces + pressure points

- Tx for TCA toxicity à sodium bicarb à dissociates drug from myocardial sodium channels

- Ataxia, confusion, ophthalmoplegia à Wernicke encephalopathy (B1 deficiency)

- Retrograde amnesia + confabulation in alcoholic à Korsakoff psychosis

- Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome à mammillary bodies

- Hx of many pregnancies + downward movement of vesicourethral junction à stress incontinence

- Tx of stress incontinence à pelvic floor exercises (Kegel); if insufficient à mid-urethral sling

- Hyperactive detrusor or detrusor instability à urge incontinence

- Need to run to bathroom when sticking key in a door à urge incontinence

- Incontinence in multiple sclerosis patient or perimenopausal à urge incontinence

- Tx of urge incontinence à oxybutynin (muscarinic cholinergic antagonist) or mirabegron (beta-3

agonist)

- Incontinence + high post-void volume (usually 3-400 in question; normal is <50 mL) à overflow

incontinence

- Incontinence in diabetes à overflow incontinence due to neurogenic bladder

- Tx for overflow incontinence in diabetes à bethanechol (muscarinic cholinergic agonist)

- Incontinence in BPH à overflow incontinence due to outlet obstruction à eventual neurogenic

bladder

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- Tx for overflow incontinence in BPH à insert catheter first; then give alpha-1 blocker of 5-alpha-

reductase inhibitor; then TURP if necessary

- Exquisitely tender prostate on digital rectal exam à prostatitis

- Prostatitis Tx à ciprofloxacin (fluoroquinolone à DNA gyrase / topoisomerase II inhibitor)

- Costovertebral angle tenderness + fever à pyelonephritis

- Costovertebral angle tenderness + granular casts à pyelonephritis (correct, super-weird; NOT acute

tubular necrosis; this is on 2CK NBME)

- Tx for pyelonephritis à ciprofloxacin, OR ampicillin + gentamicin

- Saddle anesthesia + urinary retention à cauda equina syndrome

- Perianal anesthesia + urinary retention or incontinence à conus medullaris syndrome

- Gradual-onset dementia + no sensory or motor dysfunction à Alzheimer

- Mini-mental state exam score low + patient tries to do well à Alzheimer

- Mini-mental state exam score low + patient is apathetic / takes long to perform tasks / does poorly on

reverse serial 7s à depression (pseudodementia)

- Patient complains about memory loss à normal aging, not Alzheimer

- First-line Tx for Alzheimer à donepezil (cholinesterase inhibitor à increases cholinergic

transmission); can also give galantamine or rivastigmine

- NMDA receptor (glutamate receptor) antagonist used in Alzheimer Tx à memantine

- Step-wise dementia/decline and/or sensory/motor disturbance à vascular dementia

- Hx of hypertension + dementia + sensory/motor disturbance à vascular dementia

- Visual hallucinations + Parkinsonism + dementia à Lewy body dementia

- Apathy + disinhibition + personality change + dementia à frontotemporal dementia (Pick disease)

- Urinary incontinence + ataxia + CNS dysfunction (wet, wobbly, wacky) à Normal-pressure

hydrocephalus

- Wet, wobbly, wacky + Parkinsonism à still NPH

- Parkinsonism in young patient à Wilson disease till proven otherwise

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- Parkinsonism in older patient à Parkinson disease

- Parkinsonism + axial dystonia à progressive supranuclear palsy

- Tx of UTI à TMP/SMX or nitrofurantoin

- Tx of cystitis à nitrofurantoin (need not be pregnant)

- Waiter tip position in kid à upper brachial plexus injury à C5/6 à Erb-Duchenne palsy

- Claw hand à lower brachial plexus à C8/T1 à Klumpke palsy

- Pronated arm + wrist-drop à radial nerve injury

- Midshaft fracture of humerus à Radial nerve injury

- Supracondylar fracture of humerus à median nerve injury

- Surgical neck of humerus fracture à axillary nerve injury

- Medial epicondylar injury à ulnar nerve injury

- Weakened biceps + loss of sensation of lateral forearm à musculocutaneous nerve injury

- Paresthesias + pain following burn or casting à compartment syndrome

- Compartment syndrome Dx à measure compartment pressure

- Compartment syndrome Tx à fasciotomy of uncast

- Guy lifts heavy box à severe lower back pain + muscle spasm + no radiculopathy à lumbosacral

strain only

- Lumbosacral strain diagnosis à DO NOT x-ray

- Lumbosacral strain Tx à NSAIDs + exercise as tolerated; bedrest is the WRONG answer

- Guy lifts heavy box à severe lower back pain + radiculopathy à herniated disc; yes, x-ray.

- Point tenderness over a vertebra in older woman à osteoporosis (compression fracture)

- Point tenderness over a vertebra in younger patient on steroids à osteoporosis (compression

fracture)

- Point tenderness over a vertebra in patient with autoimmune disease à recognize patient is on

steroids à osteoporosis (compression fracture)

- Point tenderness over a vertebra in IV drug user à epidural abscess

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- “Step-off” of one vertebra relative to another à spondylolisthesis

- Back pain worse in the morning and gets better throughout day in male 20s-40s à ankylosing

spondylitis

- Bamboo spine à ankylosing spondylitis

- Dx of AS à x-ray of sacroiliac joints

- Back pain worse when standing or walking for long periods of time à lumbar spinal stenosis

- Radiculopathy down an arm à cervical disc herniation

- Bilateral paresthesias in the arms in rheumatoid arthritis patient à atlantoaxial subluxation

- Bilateral paresthesias in the arms in rheumatoid arthritis patient à MRI of spine to Dx atlantoaxial

subluxation

- Prior to surgery in rheumatoid arthritis patient à cervical CT or flexion/extension x-rays of cervical

spine to check for atlantoaxial subluxation

- Back pain in elderly patient with hypercalcemia à multiple myeloma or metastases

- Back in pain in patient with history of other type of cancer à metastases

- Suspected spinal mets à MRI

- Metastases to long bones in prostate cancer à osteoblastic (Dx with bone scan); spine do MRI

- High hemoglobin +/- pruritis after shower +/- plethora +/- splenomegaly à polycythemia vera

- High hemoglobin + low EPO à polycythemia vera

- Pruritis after shower à basophilia

- High hemoglobin + lung disease / low pO2 à secondary polycythemia (high EPO)

- Polycythemia + hypercalcemia + smoker + red urine à RCC (paraneoplastic EPO + PTH-rp)

- Blurry vision or Raynaud or pain in fingers or headache à hyperviscosity syndrome

- Hereditary spherocytosis à AD, ankyrin or spectrin or band protein deficiency; Tx = splenectomy

- Treatment for ITP à steroids, then IVIG, then splenectomy

- Tx for hereditary hemochromatosis à serial phlebotomy

- Tx for secondary hemochromatosis (transfusional siderosis) à chelation therapy (deferoxamine)

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- Viral infection + tinnitus + vertigo +/- neurosensory hearing loss à labyrinthitis

- Viral infection + vertigo à vestibular neuritis

- Tx for multiple sclerosis flares à IV steroids (IV methylprednisolone)

- Given to MS patients between flares à interferon-beta

- Tx for spasticity in MS à baclofen (GABA-B receptor agonist)

- Incontinence in MS à urge (hyperactive detrusor, as mentioned earlier)

- New-onset murmur + fever à endocarditis till proven otherwise

- Empiric Tx for endocarditis à vancomycin or ampicillin/sulbactam, PLUS gentamicin

- Beta-lactam (e.g., nafcillin) or cephalosporin + rash + renal issue à interstitial nephritis

- Interstitial nephritis à WBCs in the urine (eosinophils)

- Fixed splitting of S2 à atrial septal defect

- Holosystolic murmur at left sternal border PLUS either parasternal heave or palpable thrill à VSD

- Holosystolic murmur at left sternal border PLUS diastolic rumble à also VSD

- To-and-fro murmur à PDA (on 2CK NBME)

- Pan-systolic-pan-diastolic murmur à PDA

- Continuous, machinery-like murmur à PDA

- Congenital rubella syndrome à PDA

- Heart problem in neonate of mom with SLE à congenital third-degree heartblock

- Heart problem in William syndrome à supravalvular aortic stenosis

- Bicuspid aortic valve à aortic stenosis

- Mid-systolic (crescendo-decrescendo) murmur + gets worse with Valsalva à HOCM

- Mid-systolic (crescendo-decrescendo) murmur + no change or softens with Valsalva à aortic stenosis

- Myxomatous degeneration of mitral valve à mitral valve prolapse

- Marfan or Ehlers-Danlos syndrome à MVP or aortic regurg

- Rheumatic heart disease acutely (onset of Group A Strep infection) à mitral regurg

- Rheumatic heart disease later on (years after infection) à mitral stenosis

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- Mid-systolic click à MVP

- Late-peaking systolic murmur with ejection click à another way they describe aortic stenosis

- Bounding pulses + massively wide pulse pressure à aortic regurg

- Brisk upstroke + precipitous downstroke of pulse à aortic regurg

- Syncope + angina + dyspnea (SAD) à aortic stenosis

- Dyspnea in second trimester of pregnancy à mitral stenosis

- Dyspnea late in pregnancy à peripartum cardiomyopathy

- Screening at age 50 à mammogram (every two years) + colonoscopy (every ten years)

- Colon cancer in first-degree relative (sibling or parent) à start at age 40 or ten years before diagnosis

in relative, whichever is earlier, and do every 5 years.

- Breast imaging (if performed) à ultrasound only under age 30; over age 30 do mammogram +/-

ultrasound

- Dysphagia to solids and liquids at the same time to start à says neurogenic cause à achalasia

- Dysphagia to solids that progresses to solids and liquids à esophageal cancer

- Halitosis +/- gurgling sound when swallowing +/- regurgitation of undigested food à Zenker

- Zenker + achalasia initial Dx modality à barium swallow

- After barium swallow is done and shows bird’s beak appearance à monometry to confirm Dx of

achalasia

- Pt with Hx of GERD + dysphagia à straight to endoscopy to rule out cancer

- Diabetic pt with new-onset GERD à diabetic gastroparesis

- Diabetic pt with new-onset GERD à give metoclopramide, not PPI

- Diabetic gastroparesis before giving med à endoscopy first to rule out physical obstruction

- Endoscopy negative for diabetic gastroparesis à do gastric-emptying scintigraphy

- Bulimia nervosa or anorexia à never give buproprion (seizure risk)

- Electrolyte abnormality in anorexia à hypokalemia

- Most common cause of death in anorexia à arrhythmia from hypokalemia

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- Refeeding syndrome à worry about hypophosphatemia

- Tx of anorexia + depression à mirtazapine (alpha-2 antagonist); stimulates appetite

- Amenorrhea in anorexia à low FSH + low estrogen (hypogonadotropic)

- Premature ovarian failure + Turner syndrome + menopause à high FSH (low inhibin) + low estrogen

- Trichotillomania (eating one’s hair) + GI symptoms à gastric bezoar (hair ball)

- Tx for trichotillomania? à SSRI.

- Kid with high lymphocytes à ALL or pertussis (weird bc bacterial, but lymphocytes often >30k)

- Dry cough in winter à cough-variant asthma (1/3 of asthmatics only have cough)

- Young African American woman + dry cough + normal CXR à asthma (activation of mast cells), not

sarcoidosis

- Young African American woman + dry cough + nodularity on CXR à sarcoidosis (noncaseating

granulomas)

- Electrolyte disturbance in sarcoid à hypercalcemia à LOW PTH + high calcium

- Hypercalcemia in sarcoid, why? à epithelioid (activated) macrophages produce 1-alpha hydroxylase,

thereby activating vitamin D3

- Increased calcium in sarcoid à means decreased calcium in feces (bc D3 increased small bowel

absorption)

- Tx for sarcoid à steroids

- Outpatient Tx of asthma à SABA, then low-dose ICS, then maximize dose of ICS, then LABA, then use

any number of drugs (e.g., mast cell stabilizers, anti-leukotriene, etc.), then oral steroids last resort

- Kid with asthma on SABA inhaler + not effective + next best step? à ICS (fluticasone)

- Kid with asthma on SABA inhaler + most effective way to decrease recurrence? à oral steroids (not

next best step, but certainly most effective)

- 40s male + hematuria + hemoptysis à Goodpasture syndrome

- Antibodies in Goodpasture à Anti-GBM (anti-collagen IV)

- Dx of Goodpasture à antibodies first, but confirmatory is renal biopsy showing linear

immunofluorescence

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- Hematuria + hemoptysis + “head-itis” (mastoiditis, sinusitis, otitis, nasal septal perforation) à

Wegener

- New name for Wegener à granulomatosis with polyangiitis

- Dx of Wegener à c-ANCA (anti-PR3; anti-proteinase 3)

- Asthma + eosinophilia à Churg-Strauss

- New name for CS à eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis

- Dx of CS à p-ANCA (anti-MPO; anti-myeloperoxidase)

- Hematuria in isolation + p-ANCA in serum à microscopic polyangiitis (MP)

- Teenage girl with Hx of cutaneous candida infections since childhood à chronic mucocutaneous

candidiasis

- MCC à answer = T cell dysfunction = impaired cell-mediated immunity on the USMLE

- Bacterial + fungal + protozoal + viral infections since birth à SCID

- Bacterial infections since age 6 months à Bruton

- Bacterial infections only since birth à Bruton (rare as hell to say from birth, but it’s on new 2CK

NBME)

- SCID XR variant à common gamma-chain mutation (IL-2 receptor deficiency)

- SCID AR variant à adenosine deaminase deficiency

- Bruton mechanism à tyrosine kinase mutation

- Hyper IgM syndrome à deficiency of CD40 ligand on T cell (can’t activate CD40 on B cell to induce

isotype class switching)

- Greasy, scaly scalp + itchy + papules + adult à seborrheic dermatitis

- Tx for SD à azole or selenium shampoo

- Tx for tinea capitis à oral griseofulvin for patient only

- How to decrease risk of tinea capitis à avoidance of sharing of hats

- Tx of onychomycosis (nailbed fungus) à oral terbinafine

- Tx of tinea pedis à topical terbinafine or topical azole

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- Tx of tinea corporis (ring worm) à topical azole (clotrimazole or miconazole)

- Tx of cutaneous candida à oral azole

- Tx of oropharyngeal candida à nystatin mouthwash

- Tx of esophageal candidiasis à oral azole, not nystatin mouthwash

- Tx of vaginal candidiasis à topical nystatin before trying oral azole

- Odynophagia (painful swallowing) in immunocompromised pt à esophageal candidiasis till proven

otherwise

- CNS fungal infection or fungemia (rigors/chills) à amphotericin B

- Cryptococcal meningitis à amphotericin B + flucytosine, then do fluconazole taper

- Simple fungal pneumonia à fluconazole

- Sporothrix schenckii (rose thorn + finger papule) à itraconazole

- Hypopigmentation on upper back / trunk à tinea versicolor (Malassezia furfur)

- Tx of tinea versicolor à topical selenium

- Most common cause of impetigo à S. aureus now exceeds S. pyogenes

- Tx of impetigo à topical mupirocin

- Beefy red, well-demarcated skin plaque à erysipelas

- Most common cause of erysipelas à Group A Strep (S. pyogenes) >>> S. aureus

- More diffuse pink skin lesion + tenderness + fever à cellulitis

- Most common cause of cellulitis à S. aureus exceeds S. pyogenes

- Tx of erysipelas + cellulitis à oral dicloxacillin or oral cephalexin

- Give killed IM influenza vaccine when? à Every year in fall/winter only; start from 6 months of age

- Killed IM Influenza vaccine safe in pregnancy? à Yes, give anytime to pregnant women

- Live-attenuated intranasal influenza vaccine guidelines? à Only give age 2-49 to non-pregnant, non-

immunocompromised persons

- Vaccines at age 2, 4, 6 months: HepB, Polio Salk, Pneumo PCV13, DPT, HiB, rotavirus (also give HepB

at birth)

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- HPV vaccine when à age 9-45

- Mom’s HepB status unknownà give neonate HepB vaccine; only give immunoglobulin if mom comes

back +

- MMR à first dose at 12-15 months; second dose age 4-6 years

- Varicella à one dose between 12-18 months

- Age 65 or older à give Pneumo PCV13 followed by PPSV23 6-12 months later

- Asplenia or sickle cell à PCV13 + PPSV23 + HiB + Meningococcal

- Young adult + non-smoker + has emphysema + relative died of hepatic cirrhosis à alpha-1 anti-

trypsin deficiency

- CREST syndrome lung pathology? à can cause pulmonary fibrosis à pulmonary hypertension

- Restrictive lung disease à normal or increased FEV1/FVC

- Obstructive lung disease à decreased FEV1/FVC

- Why is FEV1/FVC normal or high in restrictive? à radial traction on outside of airways is sticky (keeps

airways from closing)

- Apex to base lung changes when sitting/standing à both ventilation + perfusion increase apex to

base

- Most common cause of otitis media à Strep pneumo

- Tx of otitis media à oral amoxicillin only

- Tx of recurrent OM à amoxicillin/clavulanate

- When to do tympanostomy tube à three or more OM in 6 months, or 4 or more in a year

- Most common cause of otitis externa à Pseudomonas

- Tx of otitis externa à topical ciprofloxacin + hydrocortisone drops

- Prevention of OE in someone with constant water exposure (e.g., crew team) à alcohol-acetic acid

drops

- Tx of earwax buildup à carbamide peroxide drops

- Low hematocrit + low MCV + low transferrin + low TIBC + transferrin saturation normal or low à

anemia of chronic disease

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- Low hematocrit + low MCV + high transferrin + high TIBC + transferrin saturation super-low à iron

deficiency anemia

- Low hematocrit + low MCV + increased red cell distribution width (RDW) à iron deficiency anemia

- Low hematocrit + low MCV + decreased RDW à thalassemia

- Low hematocrit + low MCV + low iron + low ferritin à iron deficiency

- Low hematocrit + low MCV + low iron + normal or high ferritin à anemia of chronic disease.

- Low hematocrit + low MCV + low iron + normal ferritin in pregnant woman on iron supplements à

thalassemia

- Microcytic anemia that doesn’t improve with iron supplementation à thalassemia

- Dx of thalassemia à hemoglobin electrophoresis

- Low hematocrit + normal MCV + low iron + normal or high ferritin à anemia of chronic disease

- Tx of anemia of chronic disease if renal failure is cause à answer = EPO

- Tx of anemia of chronic disease if renal failure not cause (IBD, RA, SLE, etc.) à CANNOT give EPO; Tx

underlying condition.

- High BP + smoker + TIA or stroke or retinal artery occlusion. How to best decrease stroke risk à

Answer = lisinopril, not smoking cessation

- Normotensive old pt + TIA or stroke or retinal artery occlusion à atrial fibrillation

- Hypertensive pt + stroke à do carotid duplex ultrasound

- Normotensive pt + stroke à do ECG; if ECG normal à Holter monitor

- High BMI female + irregular menstrual cycles à anovulation

- Anovulation + hirsutism à PCOS

- Anovulation. Cause USMLE wants? à insulin resistance à causes abnormal GnRH pulsation

- Why hirsutism in anovulation à abnormal GnRH pulsation causes high LH/FSH ratio

- Why high LH/FSH ratio important in anovulation/PCOS à ovulation stimulated when follicle not

ready à no ovulation (anovulation) à follicle retained as cyst

- What’s LH do? à Stimulates theca interna cells (females) and Leydig cells (males) to make androgens

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- What’s FSH do? à Stimulates granulosa cells (females) and Sertoli cells (males) to make aromatase;

also primes follicles

- Tx for PCOS à if high BMI, weight loss first always on USMLE

- Tx for PCOS if they ask for meds and/or weight loss already tried à OCPs (if not wanting pregnancy);

clomiphene (if wanting pregnancy)

- PCOS increases risk of what à endometrial cancer (unopposed estrogen)

- Tx of prostate cancer à flutamide + leuprolide together (if they force a sequence, choose F then L).

- Tx of acute gout à indomethacin (NSAID) first on USMLE; then steroids, then colchicine

- Tx of acute gout if indomethacin + steroids not listed à colchicine

- Tx of acute gout in pt with renal insufficiency or Hx of renal transplant à steroids

- Tx of chronic gout (decrease recurrence) à allopurinol or febuxostat (xanthine oxidase inhibitors)

- Never give which drug to pt with Hx of uric acid stones or over-producer à probenecid (uricosuric)

- What are rasburicase / pegloticase à urate oxidase analogues à cleave uric acid directly

- Young kid + self-mutilation + red-orange crystals in diaper à Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (X-linked)

- Lesch-Nyhan enzyme à HGPRT deficiency

- Crystal type in pseudogout à calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease

- Two main causes of pseudogout à primary hyperparathyroidism + hemochromatosis

- Two ways pseudogout presents à monoarthritis of large joint (i.e., knee) or osteoarthritis-like

presentation in someone with primary hyperparathyroidism or hemochromatosis

- 32M + dark skin on forearms + increased fasting glucose; Dx? à hemochromatosis (bronze diabetes)

- Same male + painful hands + x-ray shows DIP involvement. Joint pain Dx? à pseudogout

- Tx of pseudogout à same as gout acutely; Tx underlying condition for chronic

- Biggest risk factor for osteoarthritis à obesity

- Tx of osteoarthritis à weight loss; if normal BMI à acetaminophen before NSAIDs

- Patient with OA taking naproxen (NSAID) + peripheral edema à increased renal retention of sodium

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- Patient taking NSAID + edema; why? à NSAID decreases renal blood flow à PCT increases Na

reabsorption to compensate for perceived low volume status à water follow sodium

- Tx of rheumatoid arthritis à Two-armed: symptom-relief + disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs

(DMARDs)

- Symptom-relief for RA à NSAID first, then steroids (these do symptoms only; do not slow disease

progression)

- DMARDs for early RA à always methotrexate first; if insufficient, add another DMARD (sulfasalazine

or leflunomide); if insufficient add anti-TNF-alpha agent

- Methotrexate MOA à dihydrofolate reductase inhibitor

- Methotrexate side-effects à pulmonary fibrosis + hepatotoxicity + mouth ulcers (neutropenia)

- Sulfasalazine MOA à metabolized into sulfapyridine + mesalamine in the gut by bacteria

- Mesalamine is 5-ASA absorbed as the Tx for RA; only NSAID considered to be DMARD

- Leflunomide MOA à dihydroorotate dehydrogenase inhibitor (pyrimidine synthesis)

- Most specific Abs in RA à anti-CCP (cyclic citrullinated peptide), not RF (rheumatoid factor)

- X-ray of hands in RA vs OA à Only OA has DIPs involved; RA is PIPs + MCPs

- Symmetry in RA vs OA à RA is symmetrical; OA is not

- Most common presentation finding in SLE à arthritis (>90%)

- Woman 20s-40s + arthritis + thrombocytopenia à SLE

- Woman 20s-40s + arthritis + mouth ulcer + circular skin lesions à SLE

- Malar rash + low RBCs + low WBCs + low platelets; mechanism for low cell lines? à increased

peripheral destruction (antibodies against hematologic cells lines seen in SLE; isolated

thrombocytopenia most common)

- Tx of SLE flare à steroids

- Tx of lupus nephritis à mycophenolate mofetil

- Tx of discoid lupus à hydroxychloroquine

- Most specific Abs for SLE à anti-Smith (RNP), not anti-dsDNA

- Which Abs go up in acute SLE flares à anti-dsDNA (and C3 goes down)

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- Drug-induced lupus Abs à anti-histone

- Drugs that cause DIL à Mom is HIPP à Minocycline, Hydralazine, INH, Procainamide, Penicillamine

- Viral infection + all three cell-lines are down à viral-induced aplastic anemia

- Viral-induced aplastic anemia; next best step in Dx? à bone marrow aspiration

- Viral-induced aplastic anemia; mechanism? à defective bone marrow production (contrast with SLE)

- Viral infection + low platelets à ITP (immune thrombocytopenic purpura)

- Woman 30s-40s with random bruising at different stages of healing à (also ITP; first rule out abuse)

- Mechanism of ITP à Abs against GpIIb/IIIa on platelets

- Dx of ITP à answer = low platelet count; don’t choose increased bleeding time

- ITP Tx à steroids first, then IVIG, then splenectomy

- ITP episode à next best step in management à steroids

- ITP episode à most effective way to decrease recurrence à splenectomy (not first-line, but most

effective)

- Family Hx of heme condition treated with splenectomy à hereditary spherocytosis (autosomal

dominant)

- Bleeding time meaning? à platelet problem

- PT and aPTT meaning? à clotting factor problem

- Heme findings in ITP à increased BT, normal PT, normal aPTT

- Heme findings in hemophilia à increased aPTT; bleeding time and PT are normal

- Cause of hemophilia à X-linked recessive; hemophilia A (factor VIII def); hemophilia B (factor IX def)

- Tx of hemophilia A à desmopressin for hemophilia A (increases VIII release); then give factor VIII

- Tx of hemophilia B à give factor IX

- Classic hemophilia presentation à hemarthrosis in school-age boy; bleeding after circumcision in

neonate

- Inheritance pattern of vWD à AD

- Heme findings in vWD à bleeding time always high; PT always normal; aPTT elevated half the time

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- What is main function of vWF? à bridges platelet GpIb to underlying collagen (adhesion, not

aggregation)

- What is secondary function of vWF à stabilizes factor VIII in plasma (that’s why aPTT only half time

increased)

- vWD presentation à always one platelet problem + one clotting factor problem

- Platelet problem? à epistaxis, bruising, petechiae à generally mild and cutaneous

- Clotting factor problem à menorrhagia, excessive bleeding with tooth extraction, hemarthrosis (but

hemarthrosis very very rare in vWD; it is seen in hemophilia)

- vWD treatment à desmopressin à increases release of vWF

- Vitamin K deficiency heme parameters? à Increased PT + aPTT; bleeding time normal

- Cause of vitamin K deficiency in adults à chronic Abx knock out colonic flora

- Cause of sickle cell à glutamic acid to valine mutation on beta-chain

- HY drugs that cause agranulocytosis à clozapine, ganciclovir, propylthiouracil, methimazole,

methotrexate, ticlopidine

- How will agranulocytosis (neutropenia) present on USMLE? à mouth ulcers + fever

- Tx for febrile neutropenia / neutropenic fever à immediate broad-spectrum IV Abx

- Broad-spectrum Abx example? à Pipericillin/tazobactam; cefepime + vancomycin

- What is ganciclovir used for? à Tx of CMV (DNA polymerase inhibitor)

- PTU and methimazole are used for what? à Tx of Graves

- Familial thyroid cancer à medullary (even if they mention nothing else related to MEN 2A/2B); apple-

green birefringence on Congo red stain due to amyloid deposition; serum calcitonin high

- Calcitonin mechanism of action à inhibits osteoclast activity (not the opposite of PTH; in other

words, doesn’t put calcium back into bone; it merely caps the Ca that can resorb out of the bone)

- Most common thyroid cancer à papillary; extends lymphatogenously; has papillary structure and

psammoma bodies on LM; don’t worry about buzzywordy things like Orphan Annie nuclei

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- Follicular carcinoma à literally just thyroid follicles on biopsy; will be a cold nodule, like any other

type of thyroid cancer (for instance, if you see follicles but it’s a hot nodule w/ increased uptake,

that’s a toxic adenoma, rather than follicular thyroid cancer); spreads hematogenously

- Hashimoto + thyroid cancer + no other histo description à thyroid lymphoma à autoimmune

diseases increase the risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma

- MEN1 à pituitary, pancreas, parathyroid (MEN1 gene; chromosome 11)

- MEN2A à parathyroid, medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma

- MEN2B à medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, mucosal neuromas, Marfanoid body

habitus (“oid” means looks like but ain’t)

- Riedel thyroiditis à fibrosis of thyroid à can extend into adjacent structures, e.g., the esophagus,

and resemble anaplastic carcinoma

- 17F + painless lateral neck mass + mediastinal mass; Dx? à Hodgkin lymphoma

- 42M + painless lateral neck mass + hepatomegaly; Dx? à Hodgkin lymphoma

- Electrolyte abnormality in Cushing syndrome à hypokalemia (chronically high glucocorticoid can

cause potassium wasting distally in the kidney similar to aldosterone)

- Pt has tachy + diaphoresis + diarrhea after drug à serotonin syndrome (tramadol; MOA too soon

after stopping SSRI)

- Pt has tachy + diaphoresis + diarrhea + tricuspid valve lesion à carcinoid syndrome

- Cause of carcinoid syndrome à usually small bowel or appendiceal tumor that has metastasized to

liver (if not metastasized, liver can process serotonin derivatives it receives); can also be due to

bronchogenic carcinoid; tumors are S-100 positive and of neural crest origin

- Dx of serotonin + carcinoid syndromes à urinary 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA)

- Tx of serotonin syndrome à remove offending agents + administer cyproheptadine (serotonin

receptor antagonist)

- Tx of carcinoid syndrome à Tx underlying condition

- Asthma (outpatient) à albuterol (short-acting beta-2 agonist; SABA) inhaler for immediate Mx à if

insufficient, start low-dose ICS (inhaled corticosteroid) preventer à if insufficient, maximize dose of

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ICS preventer à if insufficient, add salmeterol inhaler (long-acting beta-2 agonist; LABA); in other

words:

- 1) SABA; then

- 2) low-dose ICS; then

- 3) maximize dose ICS; then

- 4) LABA.

- That initial order is universal. Then you need to know last resort is oral corticosteroids, however they

are most effective. In other words:

- 12M has ongoing wheezing episodes + is on albuterol inhaler; next best step? à add low-dose ICS

- 12M has ongoing wheezing episodes + is on albuterol inhaler; what’s most likely to decrease

recurrence à oral corticosteroids (student says “wtf? I thought you said ICS was what we do next and

that oral steroids are last resort” Yeah, you’re right, but they’re still most effective at decreasing

recurrence. This isn’t something I’m romanticizing; this distinction is assessed on the FM NBME forms.

- After the LABA and before the oral steroids, any number of agents can be given in any order – i.e.,

nedocromil or cromolyn sodium, zileuton, montelukast, zafirlukast.

- MOA of nedocromil and cromolyn sodium à mast cell stabilizers

- MOA of zileuton à lipoxygenase inhibitor (enzyme that makes leukotrienes from arachidonic acid)

- MOA of the -lukasts à leukotriene LTC, D, and E4 inhibitors. LTB4 receptor agonism is unrelated and

induces neutrophilic chemotaxis (LTB4, IL-8, kallikrein, platelet-activating factor, C5a, bacterial

proteins)

- 16M goes snowboarding all day + takes pain reliever for sore muscles afterward + next day develops

wheezing out on the slopes again; what’s going on? à took aspirin + this is Samter triad (now

cumbersomely known as aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease [AERD]) à triad of aspirin-induced

asthma + aspirin hypersensitivity + nasal polyps). Just to be clear, other NSAIDs can precipitate

Samter triad, but the literature + USMLE will make it explicitly about aspirin.

- 16M takes aspirin + gets wheezing; what are we likely to see on physical exam? à answer on USMLE

= nasal polyps.

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- “Wait I don’t understand. Why would aspirin cause asthma?” à arachidonic acid can be shunted

down either the cyclooxygenase or lipoxygenase pathways; if you knock out COX irreversibly by giving

aspirin (or reversibly with another NSAID), more arachidonic acid will be shunted down the

lipoxygenase pathway à more leukotrienes à more bronchoconstriction

- Kid has Hx of AERD; physician considers agent to decrease his recurrence of Sx à zileuton, or -lukasts

(both are correct; and only one will be listed).

- Kid has Hx of AERD; what agent is most likely to decrease his recurrence of Sx à oral steroids (sounds

wrong, but once again, you need to know oral steroids are most effective for preventing asthma,

period; this is exceedingly HY, especially on family medicine forms). We simply don’t want to give

them because of their nasty side-effects (Cushing syndrome).

- Any weird asthma Txs? à omalizumab à monoclonal antibody against IgE à used for intractable,

severe asthma unresponsive to oral steroids + in patients who have eosinophilia + high IgE levels (I

asked a pulmonologist about this drug years ago when I was in MS3 and he said he was managing

1000 patients with asthma and just three were on omalizumab).

- Acute asthma Mx (emergencies) à most important piece of info straight-up is: USMLE wants you to

know that inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) have no role in acute asthma management. First thing we do

is give oxygen (any USMLE Q that shows depressed O2 sats, answer is always O2) + nebulized

albuterol (face mask with mist); IV steroids are then administered. The Mx algorithm is more

complicated, but that is what you need for the USMLE.

- Acid-base disturbance in asthma? à respiratory alkalosis à low O2, low CO2, high pH, normal bicarb

- “Wait, why the low CO2? Aren’t you not able to breathe?” à low CO2 is due to high respiratory rate;

even if your bronchioles are constricted + filled with secretions, CO2 can diffuse really quickly; in

contrast, O2 diffuses slowly and requires healthy airways; that’s why with a high RR, O2 and CO2 are

both low (O2 can’t get in, but CO2 can still get out); 19 times out of 20 on the USMLE, if your

respiratory rate is high, CO2 is low.

- “19 times out of 20? Then what’s the exception.” à I’ve seen COPD questions where the patient will

have a RR of 28 but a super-high CO2, and the answer is chronic respiratory acidosis + acute

respiratory acidosis (acute on chronic) à in the event of emphysema, where you literally have

reduced surface area for gas exchange, even if your RR is high, CO2 has no way of diffusing out.

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- “Wait, why is bicarb normal in acute asthma attack? Shouldn’t it go low to compensate if CO2 is low?”

à not enough time for bicarb to change; takes a minimum of 12-24 hours for renal elimination to

have an effect on serum levels; this is why in altitude sickness, where CO2 is low (due to high RR bc of

lower atmospheric O2), azetazolamide (carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) can be given to increase bicarb

loss in the PCT of the kidney to essentially force a metabolic acidosis to compensate.

- 12M + acute asthma episode + given O2 + nebulized albuterol + IV steroids + his acid-base

disturbance is as we talked about above à after 30 minutes, new values are: low O2, normal CO2,

normal pH, normal bicarb; why? à he’s getting tired à low O2 means he should still be

hyperventilating, so for CO2 and pH to have normalized means his RR is decreasing à answer on

USMLE = intubate. When O2 and CO2 are both initially down, that’s called a type I respiratory failure;

then eventually it will invert, where this patient will have a respiratory acidosis with low O2, high CO2,

low pH, normal bicarb (type II respiratory failure when O2 and CO2 are the opposite).

- 12M + red urine 1-3 days after upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) à IgA nephropathy, not PSGN;

can also get IgA nephropathy from GI infections

- 12M + red urine 1-2 weeks after URTI or skin infection à PSGN à can get it from Group A Strep skin

infections

- 6F + red urine + abdo pain + arthralgias + violaceous lesions on buttocks + thighs; Dx? à Henoch-

Schonlein purpura; red urine = IgA nephropathy à HSP is tetrad of 1) IgA nephropathy, 2) palpable

purpura, 3) arthralgias, 4) abdo pain

- 13F has never had a period + has suprapubic mass + nausea + vomiting; next best step in Mx? à

answer = do beta-hCG à she’s pregnant; this is HY. Correct, girls can get pregnant without ever

having had a period à must rule out

- 14F has massive unilateral breast mass + mom is freaking out bc her sister died of breast cancer à

answer = follow-up in six months à virginal breast hypertrophy is normal during puberty

- 15M has unilateral mass behind his nipple +/- tenderness of it à answer = reassurance à physiologic

gynecomastia of puberty (higher androgens are aromatized to estrogens)

- Girl is Tanner stage 3; which of the following is true? à answer = menarche is imminent à USMLE

asks this Q straight up and it’s exceedingly HY and frequent

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- 17F + really pad period pain + physical exam is normal à answer = primary dysmenorrhea =

prostaglandin hypersecretion (PGF2alpha) à give NSAIDs

- Tx for hypertension? à if patient has pre-diabetes, diabetes, or any cardiovascular/cerebrovascular

disease of any kind à answer = ACEi or ARB first. These agents decrease morbidity and mortality in

these patient groups. If patient has none of the above (i.e., your typical fat American middle-age male

who’s a little overweight but otherwise just has essential hypertension), the answer = HCTZ or

dihydropyridine CCB. You might think that’s really weird (i.e., “why not just give an ACEi or ARB

anyway to anyone if they’re good for morbidity/mortality?”), but the basis is: you’re not going to live

to 120 just because you start taking a statin when it’s not indicated; well the same is true here:

there’s no evidence of further improvement or morbidity/mortality in pts without the above risk

factors if started on ACEi or ARB). This knowledge about how to Tx HTN is HY for FM shelves in

particular

- 32F + pedal + forearm edema after commencing anti-hypertensive agent; Dx? à answer = fluid

retention / edema caused by dihydropyridine CCB (e.g., nifedipine) à really HY side-effect of d-CCBs!

- Side-effects of thiazides à hyperGLUC à hyperglycemia, -lipidemia, -uricemia, calcemia

- Whom should you never give thiazides to? à prediabetics or diabetics à will push people into type II

DM and make current DMs worse. One of the worst/frequent pharmacologic mistreatments. Also

don’t give to pts with Hx of gout (bc of hyperuricemia risk)

- Diabetic pt on HCTZ for HTN à take them the fuck off the thiazide and put them on an ACEi or ARB.

- Important use of thiazide apart from HTN management in select patients à decreased risk of nephro-

/ ureterolithiasis (stones) because they cause hypocalciuria (and hence hypercalcemia)

- 72F + 6-month Hx of small painless papule from a chickenpox scar on her chin; Dx? à answer =

Marjolin ulcer (squamous cell carcinoma) à SCC growing from previous scar or burn site

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